Currently not on view

Betrayal of Christ,

ca. 1509–11

Albrecht Dürer, 1471–1528; born and died Nuremberg, Germany; active Venice, Italy, and Nuremburg
x1958-14
The Passion of Christ—the narrative of Jesus’s crucifixion and the events leading up to it—includes the pivotal nighttime episodes of his betrayal by his disciple Judas and subsequent arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane. Dürer made two small-scale Passion print series, which demonstrate the diverse pictorial and expressive potentials of the woodcut and engraving techniques. In both depictions, Dürer adhered to the convention of combining Jesus’s betrayal and arrest into one scene. He also inserted an incident involving another disciple: Simon Peter cuts off the ear of Malchus, shown holding a lantern, in an attempt to prevent Jesus’s arrest. Although the tonal effects achieved in the engraving are more refined than those in the woodcut, Dürer departed from tradition in both works by delineating the darkness of the sky, which earlier northern printmakers had left blank.

Information

Title
Betrayal of Christ
Dates

ca. 1509–11

Medium
Woodcut
Dimensions
block: 12.7 × 9.8 cm (5 × 3 7/8 in.) sheet: 13.2 × 10.2 cm (5 3/16 × 4 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of John P. Poe, Class of 1922, in memory of Albert M. Friend Jr., Class of 1915
Object Number
x1958-14
Place Made

Europe, Germany, Nuremburg

Inscription
Monogram in block, lower right corner: AD
Reference Numbers
Bartsch 28; Dodgson 71; Hollstein 136; Meder 136; Schoch 197
Culture
Materials
Techniques